Notes
Notes in F Power
F Power uses F as the root and C as the perfect fifth.
F
root
anchors the chord and gives the voicing its name.
C
perfect fifth
keeps the chord grounded with a stable upper anchor.
Sound and feel
What F Power sounds like
F Power has a punchy, direct, neutral guitar sound.
Because the third is missing, the chord stays open enough to work in both major and minor contexts.
Playing tips
How to play F Power on guitar
Find the root on the low E string at fret 1 before you place the other fingers.
Place the lowest note first, then stack the rest of the movable shape across frets 1 to 3.
Start the strum from the low E string so the G, B, and high E strings stay out.
Pick through the strings once before you strum hard, and fix the first dull note you hear.
Check the fret number before each full strum so the whole shape does not drift a fret high or low.
Theory
Why F Power works
F Power uses the formula 1 - 5.
Leaving out the third removes the major-or-minor decision and keeps the chord focused on root and fifth.
Musical context
Where F Power commonly appears
F Power is easiest to place once you hear which same-root and related-key chords it connects to.
F Power commonly appears in rock and riff-based playing, where leaving out the third keeps the chord usable in both major and minor settings.
riff-based rhythm use
F Power is more about rhythm and attack than detailed harmonic color, which is why it shows up constantly in palm-muted parts and heavier guitar music.
neutral harmonic use
F Power can fit both major and minor-key material because the shape leaves out the third that would normally define the chord more clearly.
Quick answers
FAQ about F Power
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Reference
Quick reference
Keep the notes, formula, and difficulty label in view while you practice.
- Notes
- F and C
- Formula
- 1 - 5
- Main shape
- movable shape
- Root string
- low E string
- Featured difficulty
- Beginner-friendly
Same root
F chordsCompare this root across major, minor, suspended, seventh, power, and added-tone colors.